Cherry v. Board of Regents of University

264 A.D. 23, 34 N.Y.S.2d 483, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4057

This text of 264 A.D. 23 (Cherry v. Board of Regents of University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherry v. Board of Regents of University, 264 A.D. 23, 34 N.Y.S.2d 483, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4057 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Heffernan, J.

Petitioner was licensed to practice dentistry in this State on June 29, 1918, and has since practiced his profession in New York city.

In October, 1940, charges of unprofessional conduct were filed against him with the Department of Education of the State and with the State Board of Dental Examiners. In the charges it is asserted that petitioner is guilty of unprofessional conduct in violation of clause (h) of subdivision 2 of section 1311 of the Education Law in that between October, 1937, and August, 1939, he used an advertising solicitor to obtain patients and that as a result of such method he did obtain a number of patients.

After the charges were filed the State Board of Dental Examiners decided that a trial was necessary and appointed a subcommittee from its members for that purpose. A copy of the charges with notice of hearing was served on petitioner. After a hearing the subcommittee unanimously found petitioner guilty and recommended that he be censured and reprimanded. The Board of Dental Examiners reviewed the record and concurred in the recommendation. The Board of Regents, after a hearing on notice to petitioner, rejected the recommendation of the Board of Dental Examiners and voted to suspend petitioner’s license to practice dentistry for a period of six months and directed the Commissioner of Education to issue an order accordingly.

Thereafter, pursuant to the provisions of subdivision 5 of section 1311 of the Education Law, petitioner applied for an order of certiorari to review the action of the Board of Regents in suspending him.

After a hearing the Albany Special Term of the Supreme Court annulled the order of the Commissioner of Education and the determination of the Board of Regents and from that decision the respondent has come to our court.

[25]*25The facts in this case are similar to those involved in the companion case concerning Dr. Robert Rubenstein. (Matter of Bubenstein v. Board of Regents, 264 App. Div. 745.) Both cases were argued together. The issues of law in both are identical and a decision in one is determinative of the other.

The Education Law, in subdivision 2 of section 1311, provides for the suspension or revocation of a license to practice dentistry upon proof of any of the following acts: (a) immoral conduct, (b) gross inefficiency, (c) fraud in the practice of dentistry, (d, e) employment or abetment of an unlicensed person to practice dentistry, (f) conviction of a crime, (g) advertising for patronage by means of handbills, posters, circulars, stereopticon slides, motion pictures, radio or newspapers, and then concludes with subdivision (h) as follows: That the dentist has been otherwise or in any other way guilty of unprofessional conduct.”

The Board of Regents has adopted a number of rules relating ot the practice of dentistry. Among them is rule 5 which governs dental advertising and which reads:

Dental Advertising. In the administration of the law, the following forms of advertising are considered unprofessional and objectionable: * * *

5. Employing or maldng use of advertising solicitors or free publicity press agents.”

It cannot be doubted that the Board of Regents has power to exercise legislative functions in enacting canons of ethics to define further what constitutes proper or improper practices of dentistry. (Education Law, §§ 46, 51; Matter of Dr. Bloom, Dentist, Inc., v. Cruise, 259 N. Y. 358.)

In support of the charges against petitioner it was shown that a man named Reuben Smith owned a large credit clothing store known as Stewart’s Clothing Store, the store being incorporated as Stewart’s Credit Corp. Smith also did business under the registered trade name of Dental Credit Service ” with offices adjoining those of petitioner. The two concerns, Stewart’s Credit Corp. and Dental Credit Service, were one and the same. Smith and two of his employees in the clothing store solicited patients for petitioner and for other dentists from among the customers who came to the clothing store. Signs advertising public dental credit were located in various parts of the store. Clerks from the store physically escorted prospective patients to petitioner’s office. When the patient arrived there he was examined, a price was named for the work suggested and all financial arrangements were completed by the Dental Credit Service which added three dollars as a uniform credit charge. The prospective patient was then required to [26]*26execute an assignment of wages as security for the bill. In many instances the patient was also required to have his account guaranteed. When the work was done all payments were made either to Dental Credit Service or to Stewart’s Clothing Corp. and petitioner received seventy per cent of the proceeds, the affiliate retaining thirty per cent. Smith testified that he did a large business and that he had printed and circulated in Brooklyn 100,000 circulars. Dentists were supplied with these circulars and in three years it was shown that the Dental Credit Service did a business of $20,000. Petitioner admitted that as a result of these activities he had secured twenty-five patients whom he had never met before and who came to him solely as a result of the solicitation of the concerns operated by Smith. Testimony as to the methods of solicitation, financing and payment and the execution of wage assignments was given by many witnesses. The only character witness called by petitioner was Dr. Louis Lautman, chief of the department at the Jewish Hospital, and a dentist since 1907. Both on direct and cross-examination he testified that the activities of petitioner and the Stewart Clothing Corp. were unprofessional.

We have not reviewed the testimony in detail but from what has been shown it seems to us that the Board of Dental Examiners and the Board of Regents were justified in finding that petitioner was guilty of unprofessional conduct. The practices complained of were clearly of an objectionable and unprofessional nature. In the enactment of the statutes relating to the practice of dentistry the Legislature had a right to estimate the baleful effects of such practices and to put a stop to them. It was not dealing with shopkeepers and traders but with the members of a profession treating human ailments and demanding different standards of conduct from those which are traditional in the competition of the market place.

In arriving at its conclusion the Special Term relied entirely on Brown v. University of State of New York (242 App. Div. 85; affd., 266 N. Y. 598). We think the Special Term has misapprehended the effect of that decision. In our opinion the Brown case is not a controlling authority here. When that case was decided the statute authorized the revocation of a dentist’s license for a number of reasons, among others, if he was “ guilty of untrue, fraudulent, misleading or deceptive advertising.” At that time rule 8 of the Rules of the Board of Regents Governing Dental Advertising prohibited the use of “ handbills, * * * circulars, * * * motion pictures, radio, * * * or other advertising devices for the purpose of soliciting patronage.” This court held, and the Court of Appeals concurred, that the rule was more restrictive [27]*27than the statute and that the basic law did not prohibit advertising which is not untrue, fraudulent, misleading or deceptive.

Following the decision in the Brown

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Related

Brown v. University of the State of New York
195 N.E. 217 (New York Court of Appeals, 1935)
Matter of Dr. Bloom Dentist, Inc. v. Cruise
182 N.E. 16 (New York Court of Appeals, 1932)
Brown v. University of New York
242 A.D. 85 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1934)
Rubenstein v. Board of Regents
264 A.D. 745 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
264 A.D. 23, 34 N.Y.S.2d 483, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherry-v-board-of-regents-of-university-nyappdiv-1942.